Boat of the Year – Sailing World https://www.sailingworld.com Sailing World is your go-to site and magazine for the best sailboat reviews, sail racing news, regatta schedules, sailing gear reviews and more. Wed, 13 Sep 2023 17:30:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 https://www.sailingworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/favicon-slw.png Boat of the Year – Sailing World https://www.sailingworld.com 32 32 Xquisite 30 Sportcat Nominated for Sailing World Boat of the Year https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/xquisite-30-sportcat-nominated-for-sailing-world-boat-of-the-year/ Fri, 08 Sep 2023 14:02:39 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=76120 Xquisite Yachts' Sportcat 30 is designed to train new big-catamaran owners, but as a one-design fleet, the lightweight and simple cat would be a blast. Here's the details on this nominee for Sailing World's 2024 Boat of the Year.

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Xquisite 30 Sportcat overhead
The Xquisite 30 Sportcat is primarily a day sailing catamaran designed to be easy to launch and sail. Its secondary design purpose is for it to be used as a training platform for the company’s larger cruising catamaran owners. Courtesy Xquisite Yachts

Like most things in life, innovation is born of either necessity or discovery, and for Tamas Hamor, founder of Xquisite Yachts, the necessity after 11 years of bluewater sailing with his wife was profound: on most production boats it’s nearly impossible to access mechanicals and even more difficult to get after-sales service. One experience in particular following a Pacific Ocean dismasting was the final straw that sent him into the boat building business: “It took months to get a rigging drawing from the manufacturer,” Hamor says. “It got to the point where we said there must be a better way to do this.”

Hamor’s solution was to launch his own brand with a focus on building boats with “the highest build quality and design, where every component, every tank and every pump is accessible and serviceable.” The result over the past 10 years has been a fast-growing line of ever larger award-winning cruising sail and power catamarans and a base of operations in the Bahamas where owners are trained on all aspects of their million-dollar yacht before being cast out to the big blue sea. The company’s base has since grown to be an Xquisite Yachts Charter operation and a sailing school as well.

And to the point of innovation through necessity once again, Hamor and his expanding team—with builders in South Africa, Portugal and Poland—have now launched their new Xquisite 30 Sportcat as a means to upskill owners on the nuances of big-cat sailing by schooling them in a fast and nimble package. In Freeport, it’s envisioned, Xquiste owners and guests will be able to island hop on the Sportcat to familiarize themselves with the feel of a catamaran. And someday in the near future, Hamor says, there will be a fleet of them in Freeport, with inter-island one-design poker racing and a school for the local kids to get up to speed.

Xquisite 30 Sportcat sideview
Hatches to the interior of each hull lead to small aft cabins and forward storage compartments. Courtesy Xquisite Yachts

It’s been long since the heyday of the slick and fast Stiletto Catamarans that a production builder has offered a sporty mid-sized day sailing catamaran. The industry focus is trimarans with basic cruising accommodations, but the Xquisite 30 Sportcat does not claim to be a liveaboard cruiser whatsoever. Sure, you could take it overnight and sleep on deck or in one of the two small aft cabins, but that’s not the point. Hamor says this boat is all about day sailing and experiencing the sensations and movements of a big cat at a much smaller scale.

“I don’t believe we’re going to sell a lot of them, but Xquisite is not about mass manufacturing anyways,” he says.

The Sportcat 30 model nominated for Sailing World’s upcoming Boat of the Year testing is a 2,000-pound shallow draft version with kick-up rudders and skegs. Homas says the boat can be built with retractable daggerboards for those who are keen to race it or sail it in deeper waters, but again, day sailing and catamaran skill development for Xquisite owners is the priority.

At $285,000 all-in the Sportcat 30 is an expensive day sailor, Homas admits, but he never wanted to build it on the cheap, reasoning the better it’s built the fewer service calls he’ll get. The sailplan is plenty powered up with a North Sails 3Di inventory (main, self-tacking jib, and gennaker) on a rotating carbon spar from French spar maker AG+ and all considerations were made to keep the carbon-reinforced vinylester infused platform as lightweight as possible. “It costs as much as it does because it’s built right and has everything on it—all the top equipment and sails,” Hamor says.

The boat’s modular trailer concept is designed to allow the boat to be assembled on land before slipping it down the ramp or into the hoist with a lifting bridle. The rig, Hamor, says, can be raised with two people easily. Disassembled, the entire operation is designed to be packed into a 40-foot container for shipping or off-season storage.

Xquisite 30 Sportcat bow view
Tiller steering, a self-tacking jib and an open cockpit design make the Xquisite Sportcat 30 a simple day sailing concept. Courtesy Xquisite Yachts

For propulsion, an outboard bracket on the aft beam will accommodate a gas or electric outboard, and Homas likes the new electric engines from Mercury—which at the moment would be his recommendation over a gas-powered option.

Would be owners apprehensive about assembling, launching and sailing the boat for the first time need not worry, Hamor says. “We can do the training right here in the Bahamas and ship the boat in the container to wherever you are in the world. Or we can fly in a team to assemble it and spend a few days getting the owner up to speed.”

Because that’s the level of service he wished he always had.

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Beneteau First 36, Sailing World 2023 Boat of the Year https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/beneteau-first-36-boat-of-the-year-2023/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 16:30:00 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=74712 The Beneteau First 36 is versatile and powerful machine with many masters to serve.

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Boat of the Year
Boat of the Year judge Greg Stewart helms while fellow judge Chuck Allen handles sail trim. The judges sailed the boat with additional crew on the rail, but did maneuvers in doublehanded fashion to confirm the efficiency of the cockpit for shorthanded sailing. Walter Cooper

Sailing World Magazine’s annual Boat of the Year tests are conducted in Annapolis, Maryland, following the US Sailboat Show. With independent judges exhaustively inspecting the boats on land and putting them through their paces on the water, this year’s fleet of new performance-sailing boats spanned from small dinghies to high-tech bluewater catamarans. Here’s the best of the best from our 2023 Boat of the Year nominees »

The Total Package

  • Beneteau First 36 2023 Boat of the Year
  • Stated purpose: Shorthanded racing, club racing, coastal cruising
  • Crew: Solo to six
  • Praise for: Build quality, deck layout, versatility
  • Est. price as sailed: $345,000

Like a runaway, the Beneteau First 36 careens across a westerly-whipped Chesapeake Bay. The boat’s big-shouldered spinnaker and mainsail are silhouetted in the early October morning light. It’s making trees on the Eastern Shore as we peg the throttle down to keep chase in a 19-foot RIB. The four crewmembers on board are having a casual conversation—like no big deal—when a cold and meaty gust fills the spinnaker. The leech flickers, and the boat surges forward onto plane. Twin rudders zipper the slick streaming out from the transom as the helmsman, hands at 10 and 2 on the carbon steering wheel, effortlessly weaves the boat across waves tops. The boat is, as the saying goes, on rails.

“Wicked,” is how senior Boat of the Year judge Chuck Allen summarizes his experience when he steps off. “That boat is going to be hard to beat.”

Three days and 10 boats later, nothing comes close to usurping the Beneteau First 36 as the obvious and unanimous Boat of the Year, a boat that has been a long time coming and overdue. It’s a boat that will serve many masters.

J/45
The interior of the J/45, built by J Composites (France), was lauded for its high quality finish and attention to detail as well as the efficient layout and brightness. Walter Cooper

Beneteau initiated its First 36 project in 2019 by surveying a broad focus group of First “Point 7” owners and dealers about what they wanted in the marketplace, and the takeaways were: 1) Not another ­displacement boat—it had to plane. 2) They wanted a lounge, not a dining room. 3) They wanted their nav station back, and 4) for that, they were OK with having a smaller head.

Beneteau First 36 berths
Looking aft in the Beneteau First 36, two berths are visible. Either can be set up for sleeping or gear storage by simply stacking the cushion and backing board. Walter Cooper

Given the boat was to meet all three of its club racing, shorthanded and cruising demands, the brain trust assembled inside and outside of Beneteau focused on No. 1—keeping it light and fast. Naval architect Samuel Manuard, the new hot talent of the IMOCA 60 and Class 40 scenes, did the hull, keel and rig. Pure Structural Engineering took care of the structure, and the weight-obsessed glass slingers at Seascape’s factory in Slovenia ensured the boat came in at not a pound more than 10,580. At that weight, of course it’s going to plane.

The entire boat is ­vacuum-infused with CoreCell (hull) and PVC (bulkheads) from the deck down, inside and out, and everything, except the fridge, is somehow a piece of the structure puzzle.

Beneteau First 36 V-berth
The V-Berth in the Beneteau First 36 has plenty of room and efficient LED lighting. Walter Cooper

“We are saving big weight there, as furniture is also part of the structure, and all of it glued together makes the boat extremely stiff and very light,” says Beneteau’s Tit Plevnik. “What is special is how calculated it is. In mass-production building, you can’t rely on precision, but we do. The boat is built to the same standard as a pure ­racing boat.”

“The moment I saw it, I knew it would be good. It’s a great-looking boat at the dock and even better with the sails up.”

—Greg Stewart

Built like a race boat, the judges all agree it sure sails like one. “It’s a big 36-footer,” says veteran BOTY judge and naval architect Greg Stewart. “It’s a full-ended boat that has a hint of a scow-type bow with a lot of buoyancy forward. Looking at the numbers, what they achieved with the weight and its placement is impressive—10,000 pounds for a 36-foot waterline length is a very good number. I could tell the minute we put the spinnaker up it was a slippery boat.”

Stewart set the day’s top speed at a tick over 18 knots and says: “I remember feeling the puff hit and load the rig, and the boat just scooted off with really nice steering. It felt like a Laser when you get it in that groove and it just levitates. With the dual rudders, which are pretty long, the boat has more of a power-steering feel upwind, so it lets you do a lot of things. There’s so much control, which is a good thing because you can drive out of situations, but at the same time, it’s easy to oversteer.”

Beneteau First 36 sink
The Beneteau First 36’s clever drop down sink allowed them to reduce the size of the head and use space in the salon. Walter Cooper

Multiple cockpit mock-ups done at ­different heel angles produced a workspace that the judges could find no flaw with. “It’s all legit, easy and clean in the pit,” Allen says. “With the four of us in the ­cockpit, we had plenty of space to move around and were never into each other.

“I was doing a lot of trimming downwind,” Allen adds. “You can feel the boat take off. It was really stable and easy to handle. The thing is light and fast, and we did push it to try and wipe it out, but it was hard to do.”

All the judges praised the clever location of the primary winches on sloped coamings, which were easier to trim from than a traditional winch-on-the-coaming setup. “They’re at the perfect height,” says judge Dave Powlison, “and with them angled like that, you don’t have to crane your neck to see the sail, and the lead is virtually override-proof.”

Beneteau First 36 nav station
Surveys conducted in the initial stages of development for the Beneteau First 36 told them customers wanted a proper nav station. Walter Cooper

Also noteworthy is the generous space between the high carbon wheels and the cockpit walls that allow the helmsman to slide forward without having to step up and around the wheel. The jib trimmer has easy access to the three-dimensional clue adjustment systems, and for the pit, there’s plenty of clutches, redirects and cleats to keep everything sorted and tidy.

Beneteau First 36 judges
The judges enjoyed a blistering run down the bay on the Beneteau First 36 and noted responsive steering, good balance and full control in the 20-knot gusts. Stewart recorded the top speed of 18.3 knots. Walter Cooper

The standard spar, and that on the demo boat, is a deck-stepped Z Spars aluminum section with Dyform wire rigging that carries 860 square feet of upwind sail area, which Stewart says is considerable for the displacement of the boat. The mast is well aft, which really stretches out the J dimension and opens the foredeck for a quiver of headsails—for this, you’ll find two tack points on the foredeck. There are four halyards total: one for a masthead gennaker, a 2-to-1 for a code sail, a fractional gennaker, and a 2-to-1 staysail. Allen, a semi-retired sailmaker, put an estimate for a complete race inventory at $60,000, which would put the boat on the racecourse for roughly $400,000. (Base boat is priced at $345,000.)

When the race is done, however, how about that interior?

Step down the wide companionway steps into a space of design simplicity and efficiency, some of which makes you say, “Duh, of course.”

Beneteau First 36 during sea trials
The Beneteau First 36 excelled upwind and downwind during its sea trials in Annapolis in October, earning it Sailing World‘s 2023 Boat of the Year title. Walter Cooper

For example, there’s no ­traditional L-shaped galley to port or starboard. There is, however, a tall and slender fridge smack in the middle of the boat (that you connect to the galley with a removable cutting board to complete the L). Walk on either side of it to get forward, past the proper nav station, the fold-down dinette table in the middle with roomy 6-foot berths on both sides, a jetliner-size head with a stowaway sink to starboard, and then a gigantic V-berth that benefits from all that volume in the bow. Back aft, under the cockpit, are large quarter berths as well that easily cruise-convert into storage space for water toys, like kites, wings and foils, all of which takes us back to survey result No. 2. This is where the post-race party begins and ends.

With the usual supply-chain delays, compounded with the build and design team’s obsessive and calculated approach to getting the Beneteau First 36 perfect at Hull No. 1, its debut got off to a later start than hoped. But with early boats landing at eager dealers worldwide, Plevnik says the goal is 32 boats per year for the next two years. The BOTY judges assure us it’ll be worth the wait and give you plenty of time to start planning what you can and will do with it.

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2023 Boat of the Year Best Crossover: J/45 https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/2023-boat-of-the-year-j45-best-crosover/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 16:10:00 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=74713 The exceptional J/45 delivers an equally exceptional sailing experience in a luxury crossover racer.

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J/45
Powerful, is how the judges described the J/45’s sensation upwind, and great visibility from the helm across the backs of the hiking crew. Walter Cooper

Sailing World Magazine’s annual Boat of the Year tests are conducted in Annapolis, Maryland, following the US Sailboat Show. With independent judges exhaustively inspecting the boats on land and putting them through their paces on the water, this year’s fleet of new performance-sailing boats spanned from small dinghies to high-tech bluewater catamarans. Here’s the best of the best from our 2023 Boat of the Year nominees »

The Family Flagship

  • Stated purpose: Offshore performance, cruising yacht, club racer
  • Crew: Two to eight
  • Praise for: Powerful hull shape, high-quality build, versatility
  • Est. price as sailed: approx. $900,000 to 1 million

The Johnstone family and their builders take their time to get it right. It’s what makes J Boats synonymous with proper and purposeful sailing boats, which now includes the J/45. For the many legacy J Boat owners, this sailboat is for you.

“It’s been a long time since we’ve come out with a boat this size,” says designer Alan Johnstone. “A lot of different trends have come along, and we’ve been paying attention and applying them in the sportboat range and in some of our smaller racer-cruisers.”

A good current-model comparison, says Jeff Johnstone, would be the company’s J/121e, which has been very successful on the offshore racing scene. “The J/45 has over a 40 percent ballast ratio, so that’s pretty substantial,” he says. “That means we can get away with a pretty sizable rig. Our markets are San Diego, Chicago and New England, where it doesn’t blow so hard, so we wanted to be able to actually sail in 5 knots of wind. With sails that work across the wind range, we have a more powerful hull that allows you to carry more sail area.”

The J/45 is a nod to J Boats’ raison d’être, Jeff explains. It’s a boat that is offshore-capable, and easy to campaign with friends and family in the club beer-can series and overnight races. “Look at the events that are prospering,” he says, “pursuit races and cruises—events you don’t need to have a pro crew on board.”

J/45
The interior of the J/45, built by J Composites (France), was lauded for its high quality finish and attention to detail as well as the efficient layout and brightness. Walter Cooper

The boat is intended for shorthanded sailing, so there’s a traditional and simple approach to the deck layout, with everything leading to the pit, through-jammers to Harken cabin-top winches (one electrified), one set of coaming primaries, and a pair of winches for the split mainsheet that runs below deck and exits from a nicely sculpted deck fitting. With twin pedestals, the carbon wheels are high and angled outboard for excellent visibility.

“When I first saw it at the dock, I thought, This is a pretty cool race boat,” Powlison says. “When you step back and look at it, it has great-looking lines. When we got on, I immediately noted the sightline from the wheel. I could see across the entire boat all the way to the bow. It’s all really clean and has the attributes you’d expect to see on a proper race boat. When we went below, I was like, wow, it really is a boat I could live on for a while.”

J/45
The nav station on the J/45 with a padded desktop and easy access to a suite of electronics and connections. Walter Cooper

The owner of the boat that was test-sailed has a young family of teens and uses the boat extensively for club racing and cruising in New England. So, the boat was laden with cruising extras, plus a retractable bow thruster, a hydraulic mast jack and an upgraded Hall carbon rig. A custom addition by the owner was the carbon furling boom, which was a project collaboration between North Sails and Hall. The owner is extremely happy with the furler, especially not having to make the family flake and stack 1,152 square feet of race-worthy sails on the family cruise.

J/45
Walter Cooper

“It’s great to see the owner already racing it and doing what it’s meant for,” Allen says. “I know J Boats has wanted to do this model for a long time, and this is now its flagship. All the mechanicals are accessible, all nicely done and perfectly clean. This is a big deal for them, and it being just north of a million, I think this boat will appeal to a new level of client.” [Eds. note: After publication Jeff Johnstone clarified the judge’s quoted price “as sailed”: “Base price is $695k with carbon rig, and a sail-away budget with extensive systems would be somewhere in the $900,000 to $1 million range.”

“I had full control through the jibes and tacks. My sense was that it just kept trucking through all the changes in the conditions.”

—Dave Powlison

Stewart has a keen eye for a fast hull and says the J/45 gets its appeal from its subtle curved sheer line and the long, low cabin top. “It’s got a nice hull form too; it’s wide aft, but not unnecessarily wide. Still, there’s good volume for the length.”

Enough of the looks. How does it sail in 10 to 15 knots and moderate chop?

J/45
The cockpit of the J/45 is both roomy and set up well for club racing. The drop-leaf table is removable, but offshore would provide the necessary handholds to safely move about the cockpit. Walter Cooper

“It was definitely fingertip steering,” Powlison says. “It was really easy to turn—I had full control through the jibes and tacks, and my sense was that it just kept trucking through all the changes in the conditions. I could easily follow the breeze, and for a boat this big, I felt it was very responsive on the helm.”

Allen did his fair share of upwind driving with an experienced crew for the rail weight and sail trim. The midrange breeze for the test sail, Allen says, was the boat’s sweet spot. “When we lock into a puff, the boat leans over just a bit, the helm loads up a touch, and then the boat takes off. At times it did feel a little underpowered in the lulls, but in the 12 to 14, getting to 8.5 was easy and it would just stay there. And even with all the cruising stuff on the boat, downwind was awesome. With the A2, the boat can happily get to 155 to 147 with a little rocked-over weather heel. It was fun.”

J/45
BOTY Judge Greg Stewart helms the J/45 during Boat of the Year tests in Annapolis in October. With a crew of eight capable sailors, the boat performed flawlessly through the wind range and through maneuvers. Walter Cooper

“It was good on the fingertip control as promised,” was Stewart’s assessment. “It’s light and responsive, and the wheels had zero play. The rudder had a lot of bite, and the boat was—as described by the designer—a stable and powerful boat.

“On top of that, it had great sails, was well-prepared, had good sailors on board, and showed perfectly to its potential.”

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2023 Boat of the Year Best Multihull: Neel 43 https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/2023-boat-of-the-year-best-multihull-neel-43/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 15:50:00 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=74715 The Neel 43 Trimaran impresses the.judges with a greater appreciation for three hulls and the potential for swift coastal rally racing.

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Neel 43
The Boat of the Year judging team praised the Marc Lombard-designed Neel 43 for its ease of handling; quick through tacks, the boat powered up quickly when sails were sheeted home. Walter Cooper

Sailing World Magazine’s annual Boat of the Year tests are conducted in Annapolis, Maryland, following the US Sailboat Show. With independent judges exhaustively inspecting the boats on land and putting them through their paces on the water, this year’s fleet of new performance-sailing boats spanned from small dinghies to high-tech bluewater catamarans. Here’s the best of the best from our 2023 Boat of the Year nominees »

The Power of Three

  • Neel 43 2023 Best Multihull
  • Stated purpose: Family cruising, casual pursuit racing
  • Crew: Two to four
  • Praise for: Easily handling, open interior layout, overall positive sailing experience
  • Est. price as sailed: $600,000

In the sea of slab-sided catamarans that make up “multihull alley” in the US Sailboat Show, there’s a homogeneity that makes it almost impossible for one cat sailing condo to stand out among the others. (Gunboat and HH Catamarans being the high-ticket exceptions.)

Unique and mixed in among them, however, is the Neel 43 trimaran. From the dock perspective, it’s a big and imposing vessel. It’s also a proven bluewater performer that’s already won its share of hardware. While previous French-built Neel performance cruising tris have been overlooked by the racing set, that’s starting to change, as are opinions of multihulls. Ask the Texans in Galveston how many performance cruising multis are now doing their annual Harvest Moon Regatta—more than ever. And the Caribbean Multihull Challenge in St. Martin? It’s growing bigger by the year, and that’s because boats like the Neel 43 can be one heck of a ride and capable of being first to finish in a coastal overnighter.

“What surprised me is how much it sailed upwind like a monohull,” Allen says. “When you start flying the weather hull—when it’s just skimming the surface—the boat takes off. We didn’t have a ton of breeze for the test sail, but it was easy to see how you could really cover some ground with the right sail combination. I could see this boat being easily raced point-to-point by two people. With four crew on a coastal race, it would be a blast—go around the island and then park the thing and have a great night.”

Neel-Trimarans, explains Alex Sastre, the North American agent, was founded 20 years ago by Eric Brunel, founder of catamaran giant Fountaine Pajot. Neel now builds nearly 200 boats per year at its facilities in La Rochelle, France, and it’ll build plenty of these entry-level cruising tris.

Neel 43 cockpit
The entirety of the Neel 43’s accommodations are visible from the aft cockpit’s sliding doors and with windows all around visibility at sea and at anchor are nearly panoramic. Walter Cooper

The boat’s overall interior concept is to have one large and connected living space, visible from hull to hull. Step through the main salon sliding door and the living quarters are all right there before you with a near panoramic view. There’s an owners cabin in one hull, a guest cabin in the other, and a sunken V-berth forward. The layout is a striking change from similar-size catamarans, where cabins are down and low in the hulls. On the Neel 43, there’s a feeling of inclusion, like a loft apartment. It’s not necessarily better or worse in terms of owner privacy, the judges say. It’s just different. What the trimaran’s large center hull provides is a giant mechanical room below. Open a hatch and climb down a short ladder to an airy and brightly illuminated space with all the boat systems accessible.

The boat is primarily intended for family cruising, Sastre says, but it’s ultimately for a sailor who appreciates performance. “When you trim in the sails, the boat lurches forward,” he says, thrusting his hips forward, “like whoosh! It takes off!

“With four on a long-­distance race, it would be a blast [to] go around the island and then park the thing on a mooring and have a great night.”

—Chuck Allen
Neel 43 helm station
The helm station on the Neel 43 is only a few steps up from the aft cockpit. Walter Cooper

“A trimaran,” he adds, “is more stable than a catamaran and is faster than a catamaran, so sailing this boat is a lot of fun because helming it gives a feeling of great sensation. With the keel, mast and rudder on the center hull, trimming the amas is like a balancing act. It doesn’t heel too much, and it’s very stable. This is a platform for adventure.”

mechanical room
The mechanical room underneath the sole of the center hull provides easy and roomy access to all the boat’s systems. Walter Cooper

“It was the least multihull-like of all the multihulls we sailed,” Powlison says. “It handled like a monohull, and the third hull really makes a difference in being able turn the boat easily without stalling.”

The boat is an impressive build of vinylester and foam core, with nearly the entire hull built off with one mold. Neel touts use of eco-friendly and recyclable materials, and even cork is used as coring in some interior elements. Solar panels on the roof power the fridge and electronics.

Neel 43 cabin
The starboard cabin on the Neel 43 has a lot of room and quick access to the salon. Privacy curtains slide across the interior window. Walter Cooper

With a displacement of nearly 9 tons, there’s a lot of boat that spans 24 feet at maximum beam. Looking bow on, it’s a formidable-looking craft that glides quietly across the water when there’s all of 1,100 square feet of upwind sail area on the carbon rig. With its roller-furling gennaker deployed, the boat really lights up, as it should, Allen says.

The single helm is up high to starboard with good visibility, the judges note, with all the reef and control lines spilling into the helm area and into sheet bags.

Neel 43
Boat of the Year judges test the Neel 43 in Annapolis with ideal conditions to test the power and handling of the lightweight performance cruising trimaran. Walter Cooper

The Dyneema cable steering, Stewart says, was very responsive: “This is Hull No. 25, which is a good indication they’ve hit it right with the type of owner drawn to this type of boat. It definitely meets its purpose and does what it is supposed to. It’s stable and powerful, and accelerated well, even with the small jib. It felt far more nimble than other big multihulls we’ve sailed in the past. The way that it tacked easily is a really appealing trait for the type of racing an owner can do, like in the Caribbean, where the races are around islands and there can be a fair bit of tacking.”

First around the island means the first ­relaxing, and that’s what the Neel 43 is designed to do.

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2023 Boat of the Year Best Dinghy: Tiwal 3R https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/2023-boat-of-the-year-tiwal-3r-best-dinghy/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 15:35:00 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=74714 The Tiwal 3R brings great speed and performance to the inflatable sailing world to earns its Best Dinghy title.

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Tiwal 3R
BOTY judge Chuck Allen reported that the Tiwal 3R was plenty quick upwind and downwind, and as improvement over previous models, he says, the 3R was drier boat. Walter Cooper

Sailing World Magazine’s annual Boat of the Year tests are conducted in Annapolis, Maryland, following the US Sailboat Show. With independent judges exhaustively inspecting the boats on land and putting them through their paces on the water, this year’s fleet of new performance-sailing boats spanned from small dinghies to high-tech bluewater catamarans. Here’s the best of the best from our 2023 Boat of the Year nominees »

The High-Pressure Ripper

  • Tiwal 3R 2023 Best Dinghy
  • Stated purpose: Recreational sailing, one-design and rally racing
  • Crew: One to two
  • Praise for: Performance, comfort, portability
  • Est. price as sailed: $8,900

The surest way to grow sailing is to make it easy to get on the water with minimal hassle on a boat that is exhilarating to sail—and that’s exactly what the inflatable and ­powered-up Tiwal 3R does. Thousands of Tiwal fanatics around the world can’t be wrong; they love their zippy little crafts, and the Tiwal community has grown ever larger since its young French innovators launched the first model a decade ago. The Tiwal 3R is the continuing evolution of a great idea—with even better execution. Tiwal boats keep getting better, and this one is its best yet.

The “R” is for Race, and that’s because after two years of playing and adventure racing on the early-edition Tiwal 3s, keener owners started asking for more. But the engineering required to make Tiwal’s high-pressure inflatable hull and aluminum frame take on greater rig and structural loads that had them stumped for nearly two years, says Emmanuel Bertrand. They kept breaking it until they got it right.

At 10 feet and 121 pounds fully rigged, the magic of the Tiwal 3R is its portability, which would explain why the company says it sells so many in urban areas around the world. The sail, hull, blades, five-part composite spar and boom, and aluminum frame pack into two 5-foot duffel bags. To put it all together at whatever water’s edge takes about 30 minutes; it’s mere minutes if the boat is coming off the car top already pumped and assembled.

Tiwal 3R
Tiwal reps reported that the 3R can be set up from its bags to sailing in about 30 minutes, and half that if it’s already inflated and the aluminum frame installed. Walter Cooper

The PVC hull construction is identical to all other Tiwals, but the design for the 3R is a big improvement, with a more pronounced V-shape, a bit more rocker, and a reinforcement plate on the bottom near the transom, which gives it stiffness and a cleaner exit. “It’s difficult to get a hard corner on inflatables,” Stewart says, “so that’s a great solution to give it a nice sharp edge and a cleaner break so the water isn’t bubbling up over the back.”

When I got my weight in the right spot, the boat just took off. It’s quicker than quick.

—Chuck Allen

The gust-responsive rig and big sail, built with North Sails racing cloth, is what takes the boat a big step from the recreational sailor’s Tiwal 3 to the racing sailor’s 3R, Powlison says. “This is the same size sail as a Laser, 77 square feet, which is a lot of power. When you get the vang set right, it does make a big difference. It is an effective control that they got right.”

Powlison’s only desire was to be able to get the sail controls to run farther back on the rack, accepting, however, that this would unnecessarily complicate the setup.

Tiwal 3R
The highly-engineered mast-color system on the Tiwal 3R allows the vang and cunningham systems to be double-ended and very effective at controlling the 77-square foot mainsail’s shape. Walter Cooper

Allen, who’s been a Tiwal fan since the original, is impressed once again. “You definitely get a lot more performance out of this thing,” he says after sailing the boat in 10 to 15 knots and flat water. “I got hit with a puff and was like, dang! This thing’s got some wheels. It’s much faster and stiffer. I’m 170 pounds and was able to stay out on the rack the entire time, even when it got light.”

Stewart’s assessment of the 3R is that it’s built for a slightly more advanced sailor. “This thing is higher tech, with a lot more control lines, so it’s a bit more boat to handle. That being said, I’m a big guy (the manufacturer’s stated maximum load on the wing is 242 pounds), and I was never sitting in water, so it will accommodate a wide range of people.”

Getting the purchase systems for the 4-to-1 cunningham and the two-part vang (all of which are doubled-ended) into the mast collar hardware was an engineering exercise, says creator Marion Excoffon. But the end result is a system of color-coded lines and color-matched Harken blocks that work effectively and smoothly to depower the sail. Once the control systems are assembled, they don’t need to be rerun. When rigging, simply slide the mast into the collar, hook up the mainsheet, attach the rudder, and cast off for a fast and sporty adventure.

Tiwal 3R
BOTY judge Chuck Allen puts the Tiwal 3R to the reaching test, which ends with two thumbs up. Walter Cooper

“Every time I got a little puff, the boat zipped right along,” Allen says. “The foils are stiff and shaped well, so the boat goes upwind really nicely. The bow was stiff and wasn’t flopping in the chop. But the best part was reaching around in the big puffs, sitting at the back corner of the rack, with the boat just skimming. When I got my weight in the right spot, the boat just took off. It’s quicker than quick.”

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2023 Boat of the Year Special Recognition: Nacra 500 MK2 https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/2023-boat-of-the-year-special-recognition-nacra-500-mk2/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 15:20:00 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=74716 The new and much improved Nacra 500 rolls into town with as Mark 2 and impresses the judges enough to give it a special shout-out.

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Nacra 500 MK2
The Nacra 500 can accommodate a wide variety of skills and weights thanks to its high-volume bows and simple controls. Walter Cooper

Sailing World Magazine’s annual Boat of the Year tests are conducted in Annapolis, Maryland, following the US Sailboat Show. With independent judges exhaustively inspecting the boats on land and putting them through their paces on the water, this year’s fleet of new performance-sailing boats spanned from small dinghies to high-tech bluewater catamarans. Here’s the best of the best from our 2023 Boat of the Year nominees »

Retro Redo

  • Nacra 500 MK2 2023 Special Recognition
  • Stated purpose: Entry-level beach-cat sailing
  • Crew: One to four
  • Praise for: Sailing experience, construction quality, value
  • Est. price as sailed: $20,000

The Nacra 500 sailed onto the scene in 1998 as the 16-foot entry-level beach cat to rival the Hobie 16. With a sporty profile and ­powered-up rig, and no daggerboards to fuss with, the otherwise basic catamaran was a hit. Twenty-five years is a long time, however, and rather than reinvent the wheel, Nacra redesigned and reengineered the 500 from its skegs up. While technically a new model with a long list of updates, the judges eventually decided a Boat of the Year award would be a stretch to give a “Mark 2” boat. But after sailing it, they also felt it was too perfect to leave out of the running. It deserves special recognition.

There’s a good reason why the ­original 500 was a cult favorite: It was fast, fun and relatively easy to own—a great lake or beach house boat. Hardy Peters, from North Carolina’s East Coast Sailboats, is a lifetime cat guy who sells a lot of recreational beach cats. So, when he says this one is an ­excellent first boat, he knows why.

“The Mark 2 is designed for those entering the cat market,” Peters says. “And for anyone with the most basic cat-sailing experience, it’ll be a real easy pickup. And for monohull sailors, with a few cat-sailing pointers, you’ll be having a blast in no time.”

Nacra 500 MK2
BOTY judge Dave Powlison, a relatively neophyte cat sailor, jumped on the Nacra 500 MK2 and easily handled the boat solo. Walter Cooper

Nacra, Peters says, prides itself in the boat’s eco-minded construction, which is infused vinylester and a core material sourced from recycled plastic bottles. Zero waste in the production of the boat—from tooling to finish—is the company’s new approach. Whatever the process, the judges felt the boat was flawlessly finished, and the quality justified the $16,000 base-boat price tag. The additional spinnaker system is $2,500; with cat tracks and a cover, you’ve got yourself a complete setup for $20,000.

To improve the performance of the boat, the rig is 1.5 feet shorter than the old model, and the mainsail is now a semi-deck sweeper cut, all in an effort to bring the power in the rig lower for better stability. At just over 8 feet wide, the boat is notably stable, and the trampoline is big enough to comfortably lounge two adults in light air.

The judges appreciated the high-­quality lines used throughout the boat, slightly oversize and soft. The standard tiller extension is aluminum, but a telescopic carbon tiller would be a worthy investment for fingertip steering.

Nacra 500 MK2
Sailing World editor Dave Reed takes a break from RIB-driving duties during Boat of the Year testing to enjoy some time on the trap of the Nacra 500 MK2. Walter Cooper

At 319 pounds all up, the Nacra 500 is a substantial beach cat, so the cat tracks are a mandatory accessory, and two people will definitely be required to haul it up an inclined shoreline or boat ramp. For those who beach-launch, the skegs have reinforcement rods and extra gelcoat running along the entire length.

Volume in the bow area was increased to prevent regular pitchpoling and the tendency of the boat, says Allen, who went off on a solo tear halfway across the Chesapeake under gennaker, and the boat happily bounced across the wave tops without much stuffing. Not wearing a trap harness for his turn on the 500, he instead hooked his feet into the hiking straps, back over the weather rudder, and let it rip. “That was fun. It was no problem getting it up and going, and it was really forgiving—amazingly responsive to every little rudder or weight movement. It would have been a blast in the trap.”

Powlison had the pleasure of solo ­trapping in 15 knots of breeze and, as a relatively inexperienced cat sailor, he was hooked in, zipping right along with a big grin and looking as if he knew what he was doing. It was a testament to the power, stability and balance of the boat. “I could have kept sailing that by myself all afternoon,” Powlison says. “I didn’t want to give it up.”

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Little Cat, Big Attitude https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/nacra500mk2-introduction/ Mon, 15 Aug 2022 19:34:25 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=74399 This reimagined 16-footer from Nacra Sailing is designed to put ease and speed into modern beach cat sailing.

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The Nacra 500 Mk2 is available as a detuned “sport” model, but the Professional model has the all the right stuff for adults and emerging young catamaran sailors. Courtesy Nacra Sailing

If we want to start somewhere today on a path to high-performance multihull sailing, there are plenty of age-old designs from which to choose, but why go old school when you can sail the new school with the Nacra 500 Mk2, an entry into the 2023 edition of Sailing World’s Boat of the Year Awards. That “Mk2” is important here as Nacra Sailing has taken one of its timeless recreational cats and modernized it into a weapon of a beach cat or what they’re calling a “freerider.”

The Nacra 500mk2 is completely redesigned “following the latest innovations and using new technologies, the Mk2 is built to Olympic standards,” says Nacra Sailing. With additional performance upgrades available, the base boat is not a cruiser or a racer they add, “It’s a true next-gen sailing experience. And with this, a new segment in small catamaran sailing is created: high-end leisure.”

At 16 feet and 319 pounds, the Nacra 500Mk2 has been redesigned from the skegs up (no daggerboards or foils here), improving the hull shape and skeg designs for better stability and performance, which amounts to a wave-piercing bow profile, deeper skegs and a better distribution of volume for pitch balance. Nacra Sailing says the sail plan has also been updated with a more efficient radial mainsail design (“semi deck-sweeper”) and batten-tension system, as well as having the option to add a furling jib or gennaker to take it to the next level.

The new Nacra 500mk2 combines the simplicity of a beach cat with the tech of a modern Nacra performance catamaran, blending the best of both worlds into a versatile 16-foot multihull. Courtesy Nacra Sailing

The hull is a vinylester composite and the kick-up carbon-reinforced rudder blades are glass as well. The rig is aluminum and the Professional model has double trapezes as standard. With the listed price at the time of entry of €13.364 (ex. VAT), the 500 Mk2 fits in nicely price-wise with similar-sized recreational racing craft. With its ability to accommodate a wide range of sailors and combined weights, it is positioned well to be both a family freerider and recreational one-design racer with international fleets that will no doubt soon follow.

Boat of the Year testing will resume in October in Annapolis, so stay tuned for reports from our sailing sessions.

Nacra 500mk2 Key Measurements

Length 5.03m (16’5″)
Width 2.5m (8′2″)
Mast length 8.20m (26’9”)
Boat weight 145kg (319 lbs)

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Boat of the Year 2023 Entry https://www.sailingworld.com/boty2023/ Tue, 31 May 2022 15:19:00 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?page_id=74141 Boat of the Year 2023 Entry Information about entering Sailing World‘s Boat of the Year 2023 awards. Welcome to Sailing World’s 2023 Boat of the Year Awards. The editors of Sailing World are calling for entries for their 2023 Boat of the Year Awards. If you’re launching a new sailboat model into the North American market, we […]

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Boat of the Year 2023 Entry

Information about entering Sailing World‘s Boat of the Year 2023 awards.

Welcome to Sailing World’s 2023 Boat of the Year Awards.

The editors of Sailing World are calling for entries for their 2023 Boat of the Year Awards. If you’re launching a new sailboat model into the North American market, we invite you to join the industry’s most respected testing and awards program. Boat inspections and sea trials will take place in October 2022 during and immediately following the United States Sailboat Show in Annapolis, Maryland.

If you have a new model that won’t be on display in Annapolis but will debut in North America, we still would like to know about it so that we may share it with our audience across our many channels.

To submit your Boat of the Year entry: Please download copies of the entry form and liability form and complete them thoroughly. Once complete, return them as PDF files by email to BOTY@bonniercorp.com.

In the entry form, we ask you about your boat. This includes its dimensions in imperial units (feet, inches, pounds), as well as detailed information about systems and components. We also ask for supporting documents (e.g., design drawings and photos), all of which are essential for the judges to accurately assess your boat.

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Download Entry Form

Download Liability Form

See Rules

If you have any questions please don’t hesitate to contact the Cruising World Boat of the Year Director, Herb McCormick, 401.845.4420.
Melges 15

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Sailing World’s 2022 Boat of the Year https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/2022-boat-of-the-year-winner/ Wed, 22 Dec 2021 17:35:00 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=73300 The Melges 15 is a pathway boat for junior sailors and an adult racing platform that brings a deep cockpit, high stability, and an ease of handling.

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Sailing World Magazine’s annual Boat of the Year tests are conducted in Annapolis, Maryland, following the US Sailboat Show. With independent judges exhaustively inspecting the boats on land and putting them through their paces on the water, this year’s fleet of new performance-sailing boats spanned from small dinghies to high-tech bluewater catamarans. Here’s the best of the best from our 2022 Boat of the Year nominees »

Out yonder in the vast cornfields of Wisconsin, boatbuilders in Tyvek suits are infusing polyester glass hulls as fast as they can, buffing out one gleaming white dinghy nearly every 66 hours in a full-tilt routine to place the latest American-made dinghy into the hands of sailors clamoring to get a piece of the new great thing in small-craft sailing: the remarkably versatile Melges 15, our 2022 Boat of the Year. No longer shall youth and adult sailors be cast to their individual dinghy classes, and our judges agree. This one allows all ages to play together in one remarkable 15-footer.

“It’s stable, forgiving and accessible to a wide swath of physiques, a platform where you can learn to sail it and then transition quickly to racing,” says Eddie Cox, the youngster of Melges Performance Sailboats who’s been involved with the Melges 15’s development from inception to launch. “The boat fits a wide variety of sailors, and that’s what our goal was. It’s family-orientated sailing, which is important to us because that’s how Melges boats are.”

While the Reichel/Pugh-designed Melges 15 was originally introduced in May 2020, its BOTY appearance was delayed to 2021, and clearly neither the class nor the builder was waiting for its award. In less than a year, multiple fleets have been seeded and growing across the country, with more than 150 boats sailing and another 175 or so already on order as of October 2021. Demand is, of course, outpacing supply, but the folks out in Zenda don’t mind that one bit.

The most notable trait the judges noted as they observed the boat on land during October’s United States Sailboat Show is its deep cockpit, which puts the boat in a similar space as the Club 420. But that’s about where comparisons end. In fact, during post-sailing deliberations, the judges found it impossible to identify another doublehanded dinghy quite like it, aside from the 25-year-old RS200 class, which is only active in Europe. So, there’s a golden opportunity for the Melges crew in the non-skiff, doublehanded asymmetric-spinnaker market.

Melges 15
Sailing World Boat of the Year judges Dave Powlison (foreground) and Greg Stewart sail tested the Melges 15 in Annapolis in 10 to 15 knots of breeze, which was plenty enough to get them to planning and eventually praising the doublehanded dinghy for its construction and versatility.
Walter Cooper

The Melges 15’s best trait under sail, however, is its stability. The hull’s wide after sections and sharp chines push a lot of buoyancy outboard, says Greg Stewart. Examine the hull profile from aside the boat on its dolly and it’s easy to see the rocker too, which encourages early planing and a smooth ride uphill while also making it responsive to crew-weight adjustments as wind conditions change.

On deck, the judges took note of the open foredeck, which allows you to safely and comfortably walk or crawl to the bow should you need to when landing or correcting the inevitable spinnaker snafu. Mounted on the foredeck is the asymmetric spinnaker turtle with a stainless-steel throat bar and aluminum retracting sprit. The single-line spinnaker hoist and retrieval system leads to a cam cleat near the mast base and runs aft to a turning block at the transom, so either the helmsman or crew can manage the hoist. Pin-stop adjustable jib tracks are mounted on the side tanks, and sheets lead to ratchet blocks with stand-up rubber boots to provide the appropriate cross-sheeting angles.

Here, in the crew’s playground, a lot of design focus went into the height, width and construction of the boat’s backbone, making it a comfortable seat to straddle in lighter winds. The aluminum-reinforced centerboard box, Cox says, also provides extra strength in the trunk and allows Melges to build the boat more economically. The trunk tapers downward sharply aft toward the floor to provide an anchor point for the mainsheet block. From there, it’s a clean run aft with only the skipper’s hiking straps.

Melges 15
While the Melges 15 is a one-design for doublehanded teams, BOTY judge Chuck Allen easily singlehanded the boat upwind and down. With control lines that are easy to reach, Allen was able to make sail-trim adjustments with ease.
Walter Cooper

While the trend in dinghy design has been toward open transoms, doing so requires raised floors in order to drain water. To maintain a deep cockpit, Melges instead opted for tried-and-true stainless-steel Elvström/Anderson Bailers, as well as flaps in the transom should the sleigh ride be especially wet and wild.

Aiming to keep the rig tuning quick and simple, the two-part tapered aluminum Selden rig has a single-length forestay and adjustable turnbuckles, while gross settings for varying crew combinations can be made with adjustable spreader brackets for rake and spreader length.

“Put a Loos tension gauge on the forestay, tune the rig up until you hit 19 on the gauge, and that’s your base setting,” Cox says. “When it gets windy, put on a few more turns at the shrouds and that’s how you get to 24, which is your heavy-air setting. It’s all pretty simple. The boom-top mounted vang is anchored on the mast with the sliding track on the boom, which is a clean solution to keep the crew’s runway clear and have a powerful tool to depower the rig (the cleat is on a mast-mounted swivel).

The centerboard and rudder are both aluminum with rubber end caps, which is the go-to solution for maintenance-free appendages these days—less time fairing and fussing means more time sailing, and this is especially true for boats destined for sailing and yacht-club fleets.

“Our goal is to help the sport grow and help racing grow,” Cox says. “We think one problem with American sailing is getting younger sailors out of high school or college sailing into their next race boat. Going fast and being able to go 20 knots downwind hooks people—we need to make sure we are making sailing fast, fun and exciting.”

When the judges got their time in the boat with a fresh 15-knot northwest wind, they witnessed firsthand what Cox had promised. To prove a point of its versatility, veteran judge and college sailing coach Chuck Allen commandeered the 15 alone, set the red spinnaker, and was immediately a projectile—soon a red speck on the horizon.

“The stability of this really opens it to such a wide range of sailors,” Allen says. “The build quality is superb, and it is so clean. It’s classic Melges. They really took their time with it before putting it out there. Its stated purpose is right on target, the price point is good, and with that stability it sails incredibly well upwind and downwind.”

Once they were able to wrestle the tiller from Allen’s hands, fellow judges Greg Stewart and David Powlison, tipping the scales at 420 pounds combined, set off on a few speed burns of their own, climbing to windward in 12 knots of breeze at narrow angles, and effortlessly planing off downwind, knocking through jibes with ease after only a few minutes in the boat.

“Of all the boats we sailed, it was the one I really didn’t want to get off of,” Stewart says. “For me, selecting it as our Boat of the Year comes down to execution of the build and its performance. It’s exceptional in all ways. Everything is so well-integrated and clean. It starts with a good designer, and then it’s good product development and craftsmanship—there’s nothing on this boat that you don’t need.”

Powlison seconds Stewart’s praise for the boat, especially the part about how it serves such a wide variety of crew combinations. “It’s not just a race boat, but a boat to go sail and have fun with anyone, anytime.”

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2022 Boat of the Year: Best Crossover https://www.sailingworld.com/sailboats/2022-boat-of-the-year-best-crossover/ Fri, 17 Dec 2021 18:35:08 +0000 https://www.sailingworld.com/?p=73301 The Grand Soleil 44 combines racing performance with cruising features and a proper race-deck layout to serve the owner’s purpose.

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Sailing World Magazine’s annual Boat of the Year tests are conducted in Annapolis, Maryland, following the US Sailboat Show. With independent judges exhaustively inspecting the boats on land and putting them through their paces on the water, this year’s fleet of new performance-sailing boats spanned from small dinghies to high-tech bluewater catamarans. Here’s the best of the best from our 2022 Boat of the Year nominees »

So, you’re in search of a sharp-looking yacht you can do the big annual race with and then comfortably take the spouse and family over the horizon for a getaway? Yes, you are, and there are plenty of boats new and old that check both boxes just fine, but how many of those quasi-cruisers would you seriously show up in at a big-boat world championship and confidently go to battle? Not many. With the Grand Soleil 44, however, you can, and you will.

Grand Soleil’s current chief designer, Matteo Polli, of Italy, earned a reputation early on in his career as one of the best young rule optimizers in the business, taking good designs and making them better. He’s been retained by both Italia Yachts and Grand Soleil, a reputable brand whose boats are built by Cantiere del Pardo, which has been building custom and production boats in Italy for nearly a half-century. Under Italia and Grand Soleil, Polli’s designs have bagged titles at successive ORC world championships, with the GS44 winning its division handily in 2021—albeit with a top-shelf pro crew and a grand-prix-caliber program. Still, with the GS44, Polli and the team of engineers and designers at Grand Soleil now command Europe’s coveted high-performance-crossover niche with a yacht that meets all of ORC’s cruiser and racer requirements (head, galley, storage, settee table, etc.) with a high-functioning race boat that’s also competitively priced.

The GS44 is available with either a racing or cruising deck layout; the boat our judges tested in Annapolis featured the racing deck, with six winches and a split German-style mainsheet system. As with most boats these days, an owner can choose from different keel options; this particular test boat came with the 7-foot-9-inch ORC-optimized keel. There are different sprit choices as well; the tested boat had the 2-meter carbon sprit, which is glassed to the hull. Interior component upgrades include foam-cored furniture and carbon tables.

The hull is vacuum-infused up to the waterline with vinylester and foam core, and a structural glass grid is laminated to the hull (not glued) with carbon reinforcement. While there’s nothing revolutionary with this approach, having the engine, keel and mast all tied into the grid makes for a noticeably stiff boat behind bright and light cabinetry. With its open and airy interior layout, the judges noted plenty of headroom, handholds, and space to manage and organize sails.

Grand Soleil 44
The reputation of Italian-built Grand Soleil performance cruisers is that of quality construction and fast designs. The GS44 Performance continues the tradition with an ORC-friendly design that the BOTY judges felt was sharp on all points of sail. Walter Cooper

“The build is exceptional,” Greg Stewart says. “It’s all very clean, a high-quality and simple interior. Even under the floorboards and in the engine space everything was very tidy.”

With 14 feet of max beam, there’s plenty of volume inside the boat. You step down the wide and end-beveled companionway steps to an L-shaped galley to port and a giant shower and head to starboard. A big C-shaped settee and drop-down table are to port, opposite a long settee with a small nav station against the forward bulkhead. Forward of the mast is a large and open V-berth and head that take up nearly one‑third of the boat. All doors are solid wood with magnetic latches.

A race crew won’t be spending much time below, but on deck, where the action is, everything is where it’s supposed to be to get the boat around the course or down the track efficiently. “Of all the big boats we sailed, this is my favorite,” Chuck Allen says. “It has a racing feel and is really fun to drive—upwind and downwind.”

Fellow judge Dave Powlison agrees, noting that all the sail controls are set up correctly and easy to use.

Grand Soleil 44
The Grand Soleil 44’s composite construction contributes to its nimble responsive handling. The boat’s well-appointed interior makes it attractive for family cruising, but it’s built to take the abuse of a distance race crew. Walter Cooper

“A lot of the boats in this performance-cruiser category tend to lead everything to the helmsman, which leaves it all jammed up in the back of the boat,” Stewart says. “This is a more normal race-boat layout, with a racing pit, the winches and the jammers all in the right places—everything works smoothly. I also like the wheel setup. It has a nice feel side to side, and having the mainsheet system immediately forward of the wheel is good. We had a great breeze for the boat, and that made it exciting. Upwind, it locked in right away and felt solid.”

The physical demand on the judges and short pickup crew for the test sail in 15 knots was eased by a small self-tacking jib that led to the cabin-top winches.

“The boat was underpowered with the little jib, which would be fine for cruising and taking it easy,” Allen says. “But it’s got a big main, and that was easy to control. It would have been much better with a proper headsail, but when we put the kite up—a beautiful A2—the boat really took off downwind.”

Inside jibes, he adds, are easy, with the clew able to get around the headstay without any problems. “It’s a good-size sprit,” he says, “so there’s plenty of room there to get the kite around quickly.”

The boat’s limit of positive stability (124) was calculated with 14 crew, but it is regularly raced with nine or 10 crew, according to the manufacturer. “I’d say this is a boat where you’d want to have 10 or 12 people,” Stewart says. “If it’s really windy, you’ll definitely want to stack the rail. It’s got a good stability number for this type of boat, though. The [stability] limit for offshore races is 115, so this could easily do any of the big long-distance races: the Bermuda Race, the Fastnet and the Transpac.”

With an ORC general purpose handicap of 555 seconds per mile, Stewart adds, the GS44 is a solid choice for a midsize boat.

“It’s a wide and powerful hull shape, but they softened out the corners, so it’s a cleaner wake in a lot of corners,” he says. “People are figuring out the chine is really only good for reaching, and a lot of the time you’re dragging that corner of the boat too much. But with this boat, when you lean it over, it gets longer quick.”

The boat was tested with an asymmetric spinnaker, but it would be easy to add a standard pole and symmetric setup for ORC racing, Stewart adds. “If you’re doing the windward and leeward regattas, like the ORC Worlds where there are five or six buoy races and two distance races, you’re going to want to go with the pole and masthead kites—just round the weather mark, square back, and go straight downwind at 170 true [wind angle].”

Throughout the week of sea trials in Annapolis, the judges sailed a wide variety of crossover designs, many leaning more heavily to the cruising set, so it’s hardly surprising the GS44 won unanimous favor when it came time to narrow down their top choice. 

“We all thought it’s a great sailing boat, and it was presented well by the Grand Soleil guys,” Allen says. “This is set up as a race boat. For example, there was no cockpit table to get in the way like there was on all the other boats we sailed. Yes, it’s a racer-cruiser or high-performance cruiser—whatever they want to call it—but we all like it because we could easily see its racing potential.”

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